Prideless, they tore railroad men’s brown ******* lurking the thirsty Kenyan banks. Red moonlight sluiced from brambles and linen skins pressing upon tawny flesh, igniting fire of feline eye.
Imperious, they patrolled the union jack encampment lingering in shadows of long-labour’s dreamless sleep until the smoldering campfire morning when one hundred hammers lean in one hundred corners.
II.
Maneaters in glass houses can’t throw stony glances— the power to haunt having run off with the ghost. Now, they reign over the acrylic savannah sneering—not out of regal disdain, but mild discomfort from dust mites nitpicking at tautly taxidermed pelt.
Rebel eyes that halted an empire now cast dull marble stares at fossils in the floor and derailed trains of un-terrified school-children near a hissing robot-box called Mold-A-Rama spewing magma into plastic tyrannosaurs.